When the Brewers drafted Blaski in the 21st round of the 2012 Draft, Baseball America said the right-hander was “more than just a typical D-III senior sign.” In his first three starts in full-season ball, he’s surrendered only three earned runs in 15.2 innings with ten strikeouts and six walks — including a stellar outing on Saturday evening that could’ve been a shutout if reliever Jonathan Armold could’ve stranded runners in the sevent.

Blaski can run his fastball into the low-90s and also features a slider and a changeup. It’s not a combination that projects to be effective enough to stick in the starting rotation as he progresses up the organizational ladder, but the Brewers have had plenty of collegiate starters with pitchability zoom through the system in recent years. However, saying Blaski will be another Mike Fiers or Hiram Burgos is very, very premature. He has to prove himself to be effective in Brevard County or Huntsville before he will start moving up the top prospect lists, but he’s certainly a guy who continues to flash on the radar this year.